Lambasting the "duopoly" and "Tweedle Dum and
Tweedle Dee" tone of the Obama/Romney presidential debates, a slate of
third party candidates at the Hilton Chicago on Tuesday offered voters fresh
and impassioned views about the economy, war on terrorism, war on drugs and
election, legislative and educational reform. Participating in the debate,
moderated by broadcast icon Larry King, were Green Party nominee Jill Stein, Justice
Party nominee Rocky Anderson, Constitution Party nominee Virgil Goode and Libertarian
Party nominee Gary Johnson.

Issues not heard in 2 party debates by Martha Rosenberg

Even though two candidates leaned toward the left and two
toward the right according to Christina Tobin of the Free and Equal Elections
Foundation which sponsored the debate, all agreed the two-party contest which
they say is swimming in corporate and special interest money, has stifled
debate on issues of crucial importance to the public. In fact, Green Party
nominee Jill Stein was arrested with another activist at the presidential town
hall debate in Long Island last week for protesting the debate's lack of
openness. She was handcuffed and anchored to a chair for eight hours, she
recounted to the Chicago debate audience.

When asked about U.S. military policy, Stein said repeated
bombings of weddings and funerals in war zones "don't win us the hearts of
minds," of civilians. Stein, trained as a medical doctor, also urged the
abolish of drone programs both here and abroad which drew strong audience
applause.

The United States gives financial aid "to pump up
foreign dictators," agreed Libertarian Party nominee Gary Johnson,
touching on events since the Arab Spring. "We have not learned
anything." Johnson, a favorite of the crowd, is former governor of New
Mexico.

There are too many soldiers and "troopers scattered
around," agreed Constitution Party nominee Virgil Goode, adding that no
armed conflicts should occur that are not declared by Congress. Goode's conservative proposals of a
moratorium on Green Card admissions to help U.S. job seekers and defunding
Planned Parenthood did not warm the crowd. But his opposition to PACs and Super
PACs accorded with the other candidates.

Raiding the U.S. treasury for "wars of aggression"
is "wasteful" and "treason," charged Justice Party nominee
Rocky Anderson, who also noted the urgency and peril of climate change.
Anderson is the former Salt Lake City mayor.

Decriminalization of marijuana and the plight of college
students, saddled with student loans but few job prospects, occupied much of
the debate which was attended by an overwhelmingly youthful crowd. (Chicago's
Loop is home to several universities.) College age students and other
economically squeezed Americans are "indentured servants," Jill Stein
observed twice. Colleges are
"immune" to the market pressures that would normally bring costs down
remarked Libertarian Party nominee Gary Johnson thanks to guaranteed federal
loans.

All nominees agreed that term limits would solve the
universal problem of politicians spending much of their first term seeking
funding and courting special interests to be elected for a next term. Would
elected officials vote themselves out of office, asked King rhetorically, by
supporting term limits? The terms limits would have to be grandfathered in,
replied the nominees.

Neither the nominees at the Chicago debate or the audience
seemed in denial about the prospects of a third party candidate actually taking
office. "Waste your vote on me," said Gary Johnson facetiously, noting
that voting for "someone you don't believe in," is the real way to waste your vote.

For his part, Larry King reminisced about other third party
candidates he has interviewed from Ross Perot to John Anderson to Ralph Nader.
"You are like Don Quixotes in a way," he told the nominees, but this
debate is a way to "salute you." END

Martha Rosenberg is a health journalist whose first book,
Born With a Junk Food Deficiency was recently published by Prometheus Books.

Martha Rosenberg is an award-winning investigative public health reporter who covers the food, drug and gun industries. Her first book, Born With A Junk Food Deficiency: How Flaks, Quacks and Hacks Pimp The Public Health, is distributed by Random (more...)